Seven up, Rosberg aims for a famous five
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[May 11, 2016]
By Alan Baldwin
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Nico Rosberg will
have Formula One history in his sights in Spain this weekend, even if
Dutch teenager Max Verstappen seizes his share of the limelight.
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Mercedes F1 driver Nico Rosberg of Germany (C) jumps on the podium as he
celebrates victory during the Russian Grand Prix. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov |
The championship leader has won seven races in a row, including
the last three of 2015, and can join fellow-German Michael
Schumacher (2004) and Britain's Nigel Mansell (1992) as the only
drivers to start a season with five successive victories.
The chances of that happening looked remote this time last year,
when Mercedes team mate Lewis Hamilton had won three of the first
four and was heading for a third title, but Rosberg is now 43 points
clear of the Briton.
As 18-year-old Verstappen would agree, after his rapid promotion
from Toro Rosso in a swap with demoted Russian Daniil Kvyat, Formula
One moves fast off the track as well as on it.
"I'm just enjoying the moment and the form I'm in, doing my best to
keep it going and hoping I can carry it through to the end of the
season," said Rosberg, 11/10 at bookmakers' William Hill with
Hamilton at 5/4.
Another triumph for Mercedes would equal McLaren's run of 11 in a
row from 1988, and that looks more than likely given that the
champions have won 36 of the last 42 races.
Rosberg will pick up plenty of good vibes at a circuit where he won
from pole last year, his first victory of that season, but he has
plenty of rivals for attention.
Hamilton, who went from 10th to second at Sochi after his second
successive power unit failure pushed him down the grid, will be even
more determined to turn the tide while McLaren's Fernando Alonso can
count on strong home support.
"I'm confident they'll get to the bottom of the problems we've been
having. I know I'm still quick," said Hamilton.
"I've known that since day one in testing and, when I've had clean
air and a damage-free car this season, I've shown it on track."
Barcelona marks the real start of the European season, the sport's
historic heartland, even if Russia preceded Spain this year for the
first time.
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A circuit where teams test pre-season, it is both predictable and
surprising -- there have been nine different winners in the last
nine years yet all but two of the last 15 pole-setters have won.
The paddock 'motorhomes', the palatial hospitality units used only
at European races, will gleam in the sunshine with teams bringing
major upgrades to the track and hoping for a change of fortunes.
A good result in Spain bodes well for the rest of the year.
"Barcelona is a very good indication of where you are with the car,"
said Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel, whose team are hoping for a clean
weekend to show their real potential after a nightmarish string of
mishaps and failures.
Renault, who took their first points of the campaign in Sochi, have
said already that Barcelona and the first in-season test that
follows will mark the start of their real development program.
"We look at this race as a marker in the sand: the exit point of our
recovery from the takeover (of Lotus) and the first race as 'our'
team," said Renault F1 managing director Cyril Abiteboul.
"It will start small but I’m confident we will gain momentum as we
go forward."
(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
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